1,522 research outputs found

    Accessing the Legal Playing Field: Examining the Race-Conscious Affirmative Action Legal Debate Through the Eyes of the Council of Legal Education Opportunity (CLEO) Program

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    This Article critically analyzes the evolution of the race-conscious affirmative action legal debate in higher education since the 1970s, with a particular emphasis on law school admission policies. Additionally, this Article examines how legal cases and anti-affirmative action policies correlate with the present function and future viability of a once federally mandated race-conscious affirmative action program, the Council on Legal Education Opportunity (CLEO). Part I of this Article outlines some of the historical barriers of underrepresented racial minorities in the legal profession. Part II explains the development of the CLEO program during the 1960s and its growth during the 1970s. Part III discusses the evolution of the affirmative action legal debate from the 1970s until the 2003 University of Michigan affirmative- action cases and evaluates the relationship between the escalating legal debate and the changes in the CLEO program over the past thirty years. Part IV of the Article is a summary on the feasibility of the CLEO program as well as the future of law school admissions for students of color, namely black students

    Self-luminous materials

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    Report outlines specifications for the preparation and application of self-luminous materials to be used for the illumination of various instruments, especially those used for aeronautics

    Facilitating Undergraduate Learning through Community-Engaged Problem-Based Learning

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    We used problem-based or experiential learning in our undergraduate Health Policy course to examine food deserts via a health impact assessment (HIA) assignment. A HIA evaluates potential effects on population health before a policy/program is implemented, to improve health and reduce adverse outcomes. We investigated if the HIA assignment facilitated student learning using mixed-methods to descriptively analyze students’ pre-/post-test and peer group assessment surveys, guest lecture reflections, mid-semester evaluations, and HIA research paper reflections. Quantitatively, students’ pre-/post-test ratings of their learning decreased from positive to neutral Likert scale scores, but they rated their group work positively over time. Qualitatively, students learned from community speakers and their research about the challenges of health policy as a pluralistic process and solutions to reducing food insecurity. But, they needed more detailed instructions for their HIA assignment earlier in the semester

    Static and dynamic properties of crystalline phases of two-dimensional electrons in a strong magnetic field

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    We study the cohesive energy and elastic properties as well as normal modes of the Wigner and bubble crystals of the two-dimensional electron system (2DES) in higher Landau levels. Using a simple Hartree-Fock approach, we show that the shear moduli (c66c_{66}'s) of these electronic crystals show a non-monotonic behavior as a function of the partial filling factor ν∗\nu^* at any given Landau level, with c66c_{66} increasing for small values of ν∗\nu^*, before reaching a maximum at some intermediate filling factor νm∗\nu^*_m, and monotonically decreasing for ν∗>νm∗\nu^*>\nu^*_m. We also go beyond previous treatments, and study how the phase diagram and elastic properties of electron solids are changed by the effects of screening by electrons in lower Landau levels, and by a finite thickness of the experimental sample. The implications of these results on microwave resonance experiments are briefly discussed.Comment: Discussion updated - 16 pages, 10 figures; version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Efficacy Studies of Malaria Treatments in Africa: Efficient Estimation with Missing Indicators of Failure

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    Efficacy studies of malaria treatments can be plagued by indeterminate outcomes for some patients. The study motivating this paper defines the outcome of interest (treatment failure) as recrudescence and for some subjects, it is unclear whether a recurrence of malaria is due to that or new infection. This results in a specific kind of missing data. The effect of missing data in causal inference problems is widely recognized. Methods that adjust for possible bias from missing data include a variety of imputation procedures (extreme case analysis, hot-deck, single and multiple imputation), inverse weighting methods, and likelihood based methods (data augmentation, EM procedures and their extensions). In this article, we focus on multiple imputation, two inverse weighting procedures (the inverse probability of censoring weighted (IPCW) and the doubly robust (DR) estimators), and a likelihood based methodology (G-computation), comparing the methods\u27 applicability to the efficient estimation of malaria treatments effects. We present results from a simulation study as well as results from a data analysis of malaria efficacy studies from Uganda

    Anisotropic states of two-dimensional electrons in high magnetic fields

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    We study the collective states formed by two-dimensional electrons in Landau levels of index n≥2n\ge 2 near half-filling. By numerically solving the self-consistent Hartree-Fock (HF) equations for a set of oblique two-dimensional lattices, we find that the stripe state is an anisotropic Wigner crystal (AWC), and determine its precise structure for varying values of the filling factor. Calculating the elastic energy, we find that the shear modulus of the AWC is small but finite (nonzero) within the HF approximation. This implies, in particular, that the long-wavelength magnetophonon mode in the stripe state vanishes like q3/2q^{3/2} as in an ordinary Wigner crystal, and not like q5/2q^{5/2} as was found in previous studies where the energy of shear deformations was neglected.Comment: minor corrections; 5 pages, 4 figures; version to be published in Physical Review Letter

    The effect of varying analytical methods on estimates of anti-malarial clinical efficacy

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Analytical approaches for the interpretation of anti-malarial clinical trials vary considerably. The aim of this study was to quantify the magnitude of the differences between efficacy estimates derived from these approaches and identify the factors underlying these differences.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data from studies conducted in Africa and Thailand were compiled and the risk estimates of treatment failure, adjusted and unadjusted by genotyping, were derived by three methods (intention to treat (ITT), modified intention to treat (mITT) and per protocol (PP)) and then compared.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>29 clinical trials (15 from Africa and 14 from Thailand) with a total of 65 treatment arms (38 from Africa and 27 from Thailand) were included in the analysis. Of the 15,409 patients enrolled, 2,637 (17.1%) had incomplete follow up for the unadjusted analysis and 4,489 (33.4%) for the adjusted analysis. Estimates of treatment failure were consistently higher when derived from the ITT or PP analyses compared to the mITT approach. In the unadjusted analyses the median difference between the ITT and mITT estimates was greater in Thai studies (11.4% [range 2.1–31.8]) compared to African Studies (1.8% [range 0–11.7]). In the adjusted analyses the median difference between PP and mITT estimates was 1.7%, but ranged from 0 to 30.9%. The discrepancy between estimates was correlated significantly with the proportion of patients with incomplete follow-up; p < 0.0001. The proportion of studies with a major difference (> 5%) between adjusted PP and mITT was 28% (16/57), with the risk difference greater in African (37% 14/38) compared to Thai studies (11% 2/19). In the African studies, a major difference in the adjusted estimates was significantly more likely in studies in high transmission sites (62% 8/13) compared to studies in moderate transmission sites (24% 6/25); p = 0.035.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Estimates of anti-malarial clinical efficacy vary significantly depending on the analytical methodology from which they are derived. In order to monitor temporal and spatial trends in anti-malarial efficacy, standardized analytical tools need to be applied in a transparent and systematic manner.</p

    Social Isolation and Sleep: Manifestation During COVID-19 Quarantines

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    Although researchers have investigated the impact of social isolation on well-being, the recent quarantines due to COVID-19 resulted in a social isolation environment that was unique to any examined in the past. Because sleep is one of the endogenous drives that impacts short and long-term health and well-being, it is important to consider how social isolation during the COVID-19 government-mandated quarantines affected sleep and sleep habits. A number of researchers have addressed this question during the last 2 years by examining several concepts related to possible changes in sleep during the quarantines. To best understand these recent results, the current mini review provides a background on the pre-pandemic literature on the effects of social isolation and loneliness with a focus on sleep and then summarizes the recent literature on sleep and sleep habits. In general, sleep was negatively impacted for many people during the pandemics but not all. One group that seemed to benefit from the pandemic in terms of sleep patterns, were younger people who could more easily adapt their sleep times to match their internal chronobiology. Given the potential broad impact of sleep on health and well-being, better understanding how social isolation impacts sleep is an important consideration for individuals, work organizations, and governments

    Vortex Pull by an External Current

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    In the context of a dynamical Ginzburg-Landau model it is shown numerically that under the influence of a homogeneous external current J the vortex drifts against the current with velocity V=−JV= -J in agreement to earlier analytical predictions. In the presence of dissipation the vortex undergoes skew deflection at an angle 90∘<δ<180∘90^{\circ} < \delta < 180^{\circ} with respect to the external current. It is shown analytically and verified numerically that the angle δ\delta and the speed of the vortex are linked through a simple mathematical relation.Comment: 19 pages, LATEX, 6 Postscript figures included in separate compressed fil
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